njlauren -> RE: is religion a tool created to control knowledge (1/10/2014 4:02:23 PM)
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ORIGINAL: vincentML quote:
ORIGINAL: MsMJAY quote:
The question is not whether the the Bible contains accounts that are very bloody, violent and brutal because it does, because all of human history is very bloody, violent and brutal and the Bible is a truthful slice of that history and so the real question is what God's role in the history of mankind is and the Bible points out that God has never stopped working to try and save at least a portion of mankind from self-destruction while he worked out man's salvation. That was my point. That bloody history exists and we should not try to pretend it doesn't. I will not get into a debate about all of the apologetics Christianity use to justify what happened under the law because that would take way too long. I was only showing that the things I mentioned, violence, genocide, racism, sexism did indeed occur under the law. What God's role was in it? Undetermined because people threw around "thus saith the Lord" a little too loosely in the Bible. I do always find it interesting that most Christians try to justify the genocide by saying "God okayed/condoned it." Is it really easier to believe that God ordered them to kill of entire races of people than it is to believe that maybe they were misled? Either the books were the word of god or they were not. Who is to pick and choose today? It is not a smorgasbord. Either you believe the Judeo/Christian dogma or you do not call yourself of that faith, imo. Why are we to believe that the Creator is loving? Why are we to believe that with all the hundreds of billions of galaxies he has to play with he has special concerns about one species on one tiny planet, especially concerns about what we do when we are naked? (credit to Sam Harris) Vincent, my friend, in that you are wrong. Christian belief has always been varied, there were almost 100 different sects in the early days of Christianity. Dogmatism came about with the creation of the proto orthodox church that became the RC, that you have to believe exactly what they say. That was thrown into a tailspin with the reformation, when Christianity split once again, and that trend has continued. The reality is even fundamentalists pick and choose, they read the bible literally yet ignore things that are inconvenient to them. The Catholic church has all kinds of teachings that aren't in scripture, and all churches have their own beliefs. the RC says the church and priest intercedes with God, protestantism says it is a direct line....Progressive Christians put a lot of what you believe on the believer, they have gotten away from the idea there are certain things you have to be believe, that fundamentally to be CHristian you have decided to follow Jesus teachings and life. The old orthodox "I believe, and I am therefore saved" is not what a lot of CHristians believe.the idea there is only one belief has fallen to the wayside with many people. Other than evangelicals, most Christians these days realize Christianity doesn't have a monopoly on the truth, and many people who id as Christians also take things from other belief groups. The other thing is when we say the bible is the word of God, what does that mean? Fundamentalists believe the people who wrote it were somehow "guided' by God, some believe the NT came about as a full book that dropped out of the sky......the Bible represents the views of those who wrote it, it represents them feeling something and trying to communicate it. The NT texts have too long a history, they weren't created linearly, and they were put together by groups of Bishops, not by it dropping out of the sky...add that up, and saying it is the word of God literally, that it is the be all and end all, doesn't hold water....yeah lot of people believe that, but a lot of people don't, too.
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